Release 3.0.2

Release 3.0.2 of the Bootable CD has new and
extraordinary powers - well - almost. In version 3.0.2 we have added
several new applications and capabilities, but these pale in comparison
to the improvements in the X11 windowing system menus and the automation
that goes behind them. By making standard decisions for installation
and execution of many of the most commonly used tools and building our
own interfaces using perl and lisp, we have enhanced the ease of use of
our CDs beyond anything in the market today.

In our trial runs, users who had never run Linux
before were able to start building useful Linux-based networks from
scratch in 16 hours. Typically, tasks like network browsing are up
within 5 minutes of the first time the users puts a White Glove in their
computer, functions like network vulnerability scans are working within
a few minutes of them discovering their presence, and even normally
complex tasks like setting up a DNS server or email (smtp) server take
only a minute or two.

We also got ambitious and added features like
spreadsheet and checkbook software to the system, put in menu-based
systems for controlling processes, added a few new open source tools,
put in our own network setup software, augmented encrypted file system
support, put in our whois GUI with collection of full data from DNS and
other entries, and the list goes on and on. You can even add your own
custom menus, and did we mention steganography software?

OK - so you get the idea. We do more things more
automatically on a smaller CD that comes up more quickly and is easier
to use, more stable, and more secure than anything else in the market.
The best part of it comes when we see folks who try the CDs out walking
around with them in their shirt pockets all the time. One fellow is
even thinking of trading in his MAC for a PC so he can boot up on White
Glove and pop on and off of networks more easilly.